Title
Interviewee
Jennifer Tshab Her
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
Spring 6-20-2019
Abstract
Artist Bio: My work demonstrates and complicates the politics of displacement through my experience as a second-generation Hmong-American woman. As a nation-less ethnic minority from Southeast Asia, I fear cultural extinction. I create work that reveals the diaspora of the Hmong, questioning the roles of site and place, and instead looking in-between. My work engages political and cultural space through multidisciplinary practices such as embroidery, installation, and social practice. I use color as a dialogue–a tool for bringing attention to space, claiming space and recognizing how spaces are claimed. I interpret the question of ownership, whether land or body, through the use of Hmong textile, language, material placement, and color mixtures. This work is part of the larger question of what it means to belong, and how I join the conversation about the history of political refugees in America. Art is a form that allows me to position my body and other bodies in relation to the Hmong diaspora, and to investigate the generative spaces between visibility and invisibility.
Bio from: https://www.tshabher.com/about
Recommended Citation
Bautista, Allison. (2019) Jennifer Tshab Her.
https://via.library.depaul.edu/oral_his_series/128
Included in
Art Practice Commons, Asian American Studies Commons, Fiber, Textile, and Weaving Arts Commons
Comments
Jennifer Tshab Her interview with Allison Bautista